Poems of Adam Lindsay Gordon by Adam Lindsay Gordon
page 19 of 370 (05%)
page 19 of 370 (05%)
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Lie on these cold eyelids pressing --
Pallas! thus thy soldier comes! Gone In Collins-street standeth a statue tall -- * A statue tall on a pillar of stone, Telling its story, to great and small, Of the dust reclaimed from the sand waste lone. Weary and wasted, and worn and wan, Feeble and faint, and languid and low, He lay on the desert a dying man, Who has gone, my friends, where we all must go. There are perils by land, and perils by water, Short, I ween, are the obsequies Of the landsman lost, but they may be shorter With the mariner lost in the trackless seas; And well for him when the timbers start, And the stout ship reels and settles below, Who goes to his doom with as bold a heart As that dead man gone where we all must go. Man is stubborn his rights to yield, And redder than dews at eventide |
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